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Oct 19, 2012
10/12
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MSNBC
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. >> this whole thing is that mit says corporations are people. >> the banks aren't bad they are over whelmed. >> people for get. the banks don't toss families out of their homes they have to hall the cribs and swingsets to the dump it is a lot. >> yeah, it can [ bleep ] with their weekend. >> sara silverman and the daily show creator liz winstead. jean robinson how much stock did you have to cash in when you were in college. i can't finish the joke? >> i would have to say all of none. >> all you know is you have no stock left when you finish college, right? >> exactly. >> but, that is targeted for college turnout and getting that student vote out there. and we are getting down to the point now where this is going to be about turnout? >> right. >> you see the polls and different pollsters do the likely voter screens. this is about creating likely voters. if you can make your voters likely to go to the polls, if you can get them there in greater numbers than you win. and the obama campaign has worked on this for years now. they have been working on this get out the vote effort. >> ther
. >> this whole thing is that mit says corporations are people. >> the banks aren't bad they are over whelmed. >> people for get. the banks don't toss families out of their homes they have to hall the cribs and swingsets to the dump it is a lot. >> yeah, it can [ bleep ] with their weekend. >> sara silverman and the daily show creator liz winstead. jean robinson how much stock did you have to cash in when you were in college. i can't finish the joke? >> i...
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Oct 10, 2012
10/12
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WMAR
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eye 102
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>> mit students came up with that. >> brilliant but little lonely. something knew they're doing. the like button. i like this, i like that. now they're testing a want button on facebook. you want something, a different kind of product. home furnishing, piece of clothing something like that. going to partner with pottery barn, victoria's secret. >> will the people give the things to you. >> you click the want. it appears on your time line. people can see what you want and perhaps share the. >> like pottery barn is going to give it to you for free. >> may be a fee structure involved in all of this. it works out. you can build this portfolio on face book, wish list of good that you want. of course all links become to advertising and all that. whatever. whatever. >> okay, if i am not getting it for free? >> what's the point? >> what's the point? >> face book has to make advertising money. >> i'm addicted to twitter. >> you and paula. >> not facebook. i love twitter. a study by researchers at chicago university's booth business school and they determined that the yearning to in the ac
>> mit students came up with that. >> brilliant but little lonely. something knew they're doing. the like button. i like this, i like that. now they're testing a want button on facebook. you want something, a different kind of product. home furnishing, piece of clothing something like that. going to partner with pottery barn, victoria's secret. >> will the people give the things to you. >> you click the want. it appears on your time line. people can see what you want and...
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Oct 11, 2012
10/12
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KNTV
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eye 237
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the terror group has not only aid mitted to shooting her, it says it will try to kill her if she survives. >>> investigators are trying to figure how the a man made it to l.a. from japan with weapons. he was stopped on friday after customs officers noticed he was wearing a bulletproof vest under his coat. a search of his suitcase found weapons that included a smoke grenade, a hatchet, knives, billy clubs, and a gas mask. he was on his way to boston from japan when he was stopped in l.a. he refuses to say what he planned to the weapons. so far there's no link to terrorism. >>> one day after disgraced jerry sandusky learned he will lose his freedom likely for the rest of his life, sandusky learned he's also losing his pension. pennsylvania's public employee pension moved to revoke the 68-year-old's pension on the grounds that his sex crimes convictions trigger forfeiture. sandusky was sentenced to at least 30 years in prison for sexually abusing ten boys. sandusky's lawyer has said that they will appeal. >>> still ahead at 6:00, the important warning about air bags. plus -- >> i'm scott bud
the terror group has not only aid mitted to shooting her, it says it will try to kill her if she survives. >>> investigators are trying to figure how the a man made it to l.a. from japan with weapons. he was stopped on friday after customs officers noticed he was wearing a bulletproof vest under his coat. a search of his suitcase found weapons that included a smoke grenade, a hatchet, knives, billy clubs, and a gas mask. he was on his way to boston from japan when he was stopped in...
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Oct 31, 2012
10/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 79
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that's when a burglar came to our lab at mit and stole a lot of stuff including some of the tags that tell you where they go. [laughter] and here is, and here is a video about it. if you can still try to fix the sound, it might be useful. might be more fun. >> [inaudible] >> yeah. anyway, that was on the machines. that's what happened. [laughter] [laughter] [applause] >> thank you. so while this was just a quick example about sensing, i wanted to share with you another example about when you put more data streams together, that's what we are doing in singapore, so this was using sensors on the trash. but imagine you can collect much more information and get to almost like a living city where you know in realtime what's happening around yourself. so here is data in singapore from all of the networks. it tells you how the tv is behaving by using all these digital telecommunication networks, smart grid and also how much energy you're consuming and how that is related to temperature increase as you see here. how the city behaves during special event, you see the formula one racing in sing
that's when a burglar came to our lab at mit and stole a lot of stuff including some of the tags that tell you where they go. [laughter] and here is, and here is a video about it. if you can still try to fix the sound, it might be useful. might be more fun. >> [inaudible] >> yeah. anyway, that was on the machines. that's what happened. [laughter] [laughter] [applause] >> thank you. so while this was just a quick example about sensing, i wanted to share with you another example...
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Oct 15, 2012
10/12
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WRC
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eye 179
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mit and california berkeley also part of this project. >> free classes at prestigious schools of learning. >> 5:41 is our time right now. >> 6:41. >> you take over. i'll be back in a little bit. >> it's monday. storm team 4 meteorologist tom kierein with our forecast. hi, tom. >> reset. 6:41. >>> this morning we are starting off with a blustery wind gusting around 20 to 25 miles an hour ahead of a front triggering a few sprinkles, those little patches of green. maybe a few sprinkles in anne arundel county, shady side, out of the mountains, passing off north and east. leesburg, loudoun county, hometown forecast. might have a few sprinkles low 60s. by noontime, mid-60s. and that's going to be the story for the whole region in, hour by hour today. a lot of cloudiness, a blustery wind, and a likelihood of passing showers. noontime, back down to the near 60s by late afternoon. and a chill county start to the morning. we'll look at the rest of the week by 6:51. traffic with danella. >> good morning. >>> right now i'm covering breaking news. here's the situation. all your travel lanes are blocke
mit and california berkeley also part of this project. >> free classes at prestigious schools of learning. >> 5:41 is our time right now. >> 6:41. >> you take over. i'll be back in a little bit. >> it's monday. storm team 4 meteorologist tom kierein with our forecast. hi, tom. >> reset. 6:41. >>> this morning we are starting off with a blustery wind gusting around 20 to 25 miles an hour ahead of a front triggering a few sprinkles, those little...
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Oct 20, 2012
10/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 196
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and then i spent a year and a half in a graduate program at mit in molecular biology before i decided that that was not for me, either. so i tried science. c-span: and--and science magazine is bought by what kind of person? >> guest: it's actually really mostly a subscription magazine and it's scientists and policy-makers who usually read it. but they have a new section that's written for--it's supposed to be written for anybody to read. it's-it can get kind of technical, but the idea is to write something so that a physicist who wants to know what they're doing in molecular biology doesn't have to know any of the stuff that led up to this discovery. it's just like writing a--a normal news story. all they have to do is just read it and they'll understand what's exciting. c-span: who owns it? >> guest: it's owned by the american association for the advancement of science, a non-profit group. c-span: and you mention another magazine that these kind of things are published in is nature? >> guest: nature. it's, like, science's big competitor. it's a british magazine--very similar, has a n
and then i spent a year and a half in a graduate program at mit in molecular biology before i decided that that was not for me, either. so i tried science. c-span: and--and science magazine is bought by what kind of person? >> guest: it's actually really mostly a subscription magazine and it's scientists and policy-makers who usually read it. but they have a new section that's written for--it's supposed to be written for anybody to read. it's-it can get kind of technical, but the idea is...
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532
Oct 29, 2012
10/12
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KQEH
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eye 532
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. >> mit absorbing all o sees his fa basical taking a stand and admires his father greatly for this. >> narrator: but it was barrys goldwater's convention. >> i would remind you that extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice. (cwd cheers) >> nrator: and when water received the nomination, mitt saw his father angrily storm out. >> i think that my father was always willing to live according to his principles. he didn't y away from any challenge. he was a very strong person in doing that. and we learned that you have to live up to what you believe in. >> narrator: one thing george romney believed in was the viety m war. and one year later, when mitt showed up at stanford university, he would adopt his father's position. >> so, he is vy much on his father's side for the vietnam war at that time. he is really out of his y ement hiere the whole campus is being roiled by this anti-war and anti-establishment protest. >> narrator: mitt took on the protestors. >> mitt romney is a fairly rule-bound person. he actually protested the protestors. he held up a big sign that said, "go back to y
. >> mit absorbing all o sees his fa basical taking a stand and admires his father greatly for this. >> narrator: but it was barrys goldwater's convention. >> i would remind you that extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice. (cwd cheers) >> nrator: and when water received the nomination, mitt saw his father angrily storm out. >> i think that my father was always willing to live according to his principles. he didn't y away from any challenge. he was a very...
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Oct 4, 2012
10/12
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CNNW
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eye 239
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monologue, he managed to fit both n the invalid criticism is that the fact checkers are call iing what mit romney said last night many mistruths or lies. that is not the case. >> it is the case. >> no, it is not the case. on the $716 billion in medicare, that is a deep argument, policy argument, one which i'm happy to have with you or anyone else, roland, any day. on the $5 trillion tax cut, this is where he ventures into the realm of valid criticism. mitt romney has not provided the details for those loopholes and deductions he plans to do away with. it is possible but he is not explaining how. it's also insplikable, which roland, again, fits some valid criticism in here, as to why the president didn't do that one simple thing and ask mitt romney, what deductions are you talking about? please tell us all. >> exactly. roland, voters really want to know that. i mean, when all is said and done, mitt romney turned in a great performance. again, he didn't get into specifics. that's what voters really want to know about. >> the other day you never let somebody off the hook. you remember, a grea
monologue, he managed to fit both n the invalid criticism is that the fact checkers are call iing what mit romney said last night many mistruths or lies. that is not the case. >> it is the case. >> no, it is not the case. on the $716 billion in medicare, that is a deep argument, policy argument, one which i'm happy to have with you or anyone else, roland, any day. on the $5 trillion tax cut, this is where he ventures into the realm of valid criticism. mitt romney has not provided...
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Oct 30, 2012
10/12
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CSPAN
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i'm going to turn over the stage to the director of the sensible city lab at mit. he is going to talk about a provocative topic -- the city as technology. , now. >> hello. good morning everybody. can i have the slides? i wanted to start with something everybody is talking about these days -- a big data. a data is about this incredible amount of information we produced today. we know from eric schmidt, the information was produced from the beginning of humanity. this is more less what we produced yesterday and today. the definition, big data is also, you cannot put it in a spreadsheet. this has big consequences and this is what i would like to talk to you about today. call it big urban data. our cities of the past few years have been a layered with many types of visual information. because of that, the way we understand them and the way we can respond to them is changing dramatically. collecting information from our cities and we can process the information and process it later. in other fields like formula one, think about formula 110 or 15 years ago. if you wanted
i'm going to turn over the stage to the director of the sensible city lab at mit. he is going to talk about a provocative topic -- the city as technology. , now. >> hello. good morning everybody. can i have the slides? i wanted to start with something everybody is talking about these days -- a big data. a data is about this incredible amount of information we produced today. we know from eric schmidt, the information was produced from the beginning of humanity. this is more less what we...
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202
Oct 15, 2012
10/12
by
FOXNEWSW
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eye 202
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mit jagger hinting that a longer tour could soon be announced. they are like the time exwatches these guys. bill: more power to to them. if we could do that at 70. martha: we'll do a 50-year tour, bill, you and i. two shows in new york and cincinnati. bill: we'll hit all the big spots. it's a small state with a big impact on the presidential race. we are talking about new hampshire. four electoral votes but one of just a handful of states with thability to really shake things up. molly line is in boston, what did you find up there ph. >> you're absolutely right, new hampshire and iowa for that matter play a major role in presidential politicsment there is still a big focus on new hampshire and the four electoral votes which could have a major impact in the election. we had a chance to speak with andy smith up there, a professor. the poll released last tuesday shows that president obama's lead has been slipping now just six percentage points ahead of romney who was trailing by 15 points the previous week. this is a race the voters are following. >
mit jagger hinting that a longer tour could soon be announced. they are like the time exwatches these guys. bill: more power to to them. if we could do that at 70. martha: we'll do a 50-year tour, bill, you and i. two shows in new york and cincinnati. bill: we'll hit all the big spots. it's a small state with a big impact on the presidential race. we are talking about new hampshire. four electoral votes but one of just a handful of states with thability to really shake things up. molly line is...
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267
Oct 10, 2012
10/12
by
KQED
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eye 267
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. >> i'm a professor of economics at mit, and i helped governor romney develop the massachusetts health care reform, or romneycare. >> narrator: jonathan gruber sat with romney and carefully outlined the problem. >> romney was in management consultant mode. like, "here is a problem." sort of engineering almost mode. >> narrator: romney heard the bad news. >> the state of massachusetts, which he is governor of, is bleeding red ink because people don't have health insurance and they are driving up costs for everyone else, and taxpayers are paying for it. >> narrator: the uninsured were bankrupting the government. but gruber had a solution: all residents should be required to buy insurance. he called it "the individual mandate" >> jonathan gruber says, "if you don't do the mandate, you'll cover x amount of people for x amount of cost. if you do do the mandate, you will cover this many more people, and it will be cheaper." >> narrator: the mandate was an idea first proposed by the conservative heritage foundation. >> this is a very conservative idea. "let's put the onus on individuals, resp
. >> i'm a professor of economics at mit, and i helped governor romney develop the massachusetts health care reform, or romneycare. >> narrator: jonathan gruber sat with romney and carefully outlined the problem. >> romney was in management consultant mode. like, "here is a problem." sort of engineering almost mode. >> narrator: romney heard the bad news. >> the state of massachusetts, which he is governor of, is bleeding red ink because people don't have...
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77
Oct 18, 2012
10/12
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CSPAN2
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eye 77
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if you are an engineer, um, i've got a friend who graduated mit 20 years ago, started to raise her family. she's still an engineer, but now she consults and works freelance. if you are an educator in most systems and you make that choice, we don't know what to do with you any longer. so we have created role definitions that are hostile to talent, that are, make it difficult for us to retain and use people in communities. policy can help there. policy can help us think differently about pension portability, can help us think differently about access to health care, help us think differently about job descriptions, about contracts, about rules, about who's eligible for title i funds, these kinds of things. what policy can also do, and this is where i refer to andy and sarah's paper just a moment ago, what policy can do is make sure that as we are creating default norms for how we're going to evaluate teachers or how we're going to hold schools accountable, that we take great care to build in sliding doors so that people who are coming up with smarter solutions, people who want to get outsid
if you are an engineer, um, i've got a friend who graduated mit 20 years ago, started to raise her family. she's still an engineer, but now she consults and works freelance. if you are an educator in most systems and you make that choice, we don't know what to do with you any longer. so we have created role definitions that are hostile to talent, that are, make it difficult for us to retain and use people in communities. policy can help there. policy can help us think differently about pension...